Hartford Courant

US security questions arise as unidentifi­ed objects found, shot down

- By Michael D. Shear

WASHINGTON — White House officials said Monday that three unidentifi­ed flying objects shot down since Friday posed a “very real” threat to civilian air traffic but were not sending out communicat­ions signals.

John Kirby, a spokespers­on for the National Security Council, also said the military had not yet identified the source of the objects or what their purpose was. And he said there was no indication that Americans on the ground were in danger.

The shooting down by U.S. fighter pilots of more unidentifi­ed flying objects over the weekend has added to the mounting number of questions about the nature of the high-flying devices, the identity of their makers and the implicatio­ns for national security.

The episodes came after the weeklong drama of what the Biden administra­tion said was a Chinese spy balloon that floated over the United States for several days before being brought down.

Kirby said President Joe Biden on Monday ordered an interagenc­y team to study “the broader policy implicatio­ns for detection, analysis and dispositio­n of unidentifi­ed aerial objects that pose either safety or security risks.” He said the government would redouble efforts to understand the flying objects they have been shooting down.

The objects detected over the weekend flew lower than the Chinese spy balloon that traversed the United States before being shot down so they posed a potential risk to civilian air traffic, Kirby said. Their altitudes ranged from 20,000 feet to 40,000 feet; transconti­nental air traffic flies at about 30,000 feet, he said.

Press secretary Karine Jean-pierre confirmed that the White House does not believe aliens are involved in the UFOS being shot down by the U.S. military. “There is no indication of aliens or extraterre­strial activity with these recent takedowns,” she said.

Meanwhile, China accused the United States of regularly sending balloons into its airspace — more than 10 times since the start of last year, a Foreign Ministry spokespers­on said Monday.

But the United States rejected the idea: “Any claim that the U.S. government operates surveillan­ce balloons over the PRC is false,” said Adrienne Watson, a National Security Council spokespers­on, referring to the People’s Republic of China.

After the spy balloon floated over the continenta­l United States for a week before an F-22 shot it down Feb. 4, the North American Aerospace Defense Command adjusted its radar system to make it more sensitive. As a result, the number of objects detected increased sharply because it is looking for them.

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